From Swarthmore College

War News Radio fills the gaps in the media's coverage of the conflicts in Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan and more by providing balanced and in-depth reporting, historical perspective, and personal stories. Today WNR is heard around the country and the world by thousands online.&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp

Support for War News Radio

Archives

Go mobile with War News Radio

Subscribe and listen to War News Radio on our Android app, Spotify or just open warnewsradio.org with any mobile device and save it to your home screen, as seen at right.

Licensing

Except for embedded content, and where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Simply, you can use our content freely, but only in its original form, and if give us credit with a link, and share your content freely as well.

Mar

18

Israel’s Baby Bamba Olympic mascot is not so lucky

Few countries have a mascot for London this summer – and now that Israel’s Baby Bamba has been withdrawn, they will be even thinner on the ground

Sad days in the state of Israel. Baby Bamba, a peanut-shaped toddler dressed in a blue nappy, has been withdrawn as the country’s Olympic mascot after critics complained that it was too similar to the logo of a popular children’s snack. Sources suggest that Bamba will not be replaced and the Israeli team will go into competition in London mascotless.

The rumpus is a serious blow for Olympic team mascots, which would have been thin on the ground in any case at this summer’s games. Mascots are not obligatory, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) explains, which means that Britain, Australia, South Africa, Serbia and Russia are among the relatively few teams so far to have gone public with their plans. Pride, a lion, represents Team GB, while Australia has its boxing kangaroo, which was notoriously ejected from the Vancouver winter Olympics after the IOC claimed it was too commercial (the IOC later backtracked). As in previous games, Russia is likely to be represented by the Cheburashka, a tiny, big-eared, humanoid bear-cub who turns white for winter games.

Serbia, meanwhile, has crowdsourced its hoodoo. Graphic designer Ivan Arandjelovic beat off rivals with a little fellow that looks like a fluffy white chick, but is apparently a, um, vulture. An endangered one, mind. In Serbia, there are only 60 griffon vultures left.

Last but not least, South Africa, which, like Serbia, has had a competition to find a mascot, but hasn’t yet made a final decision. The choice is currently between six animals, including a dog, a rhino and a serval. Our money’s on rhino Ubhejani.